The Southeast groups practiced agriculture. Common crops were corn, beans, and squash. They also raised sunflowers (for their oil) and tobacco. They gathered wild plant food such as greens, berries, nuts, and acorns.

Wild game was abundant in most of the Southeast. The people hunted deer, elk, beavers, squirrels, rabbits, and more. In what is now Florida, turtles and alligators were an important part of the diet. Southeast tribes fished in the rivers and sea and gathered oysters, clams, mussels, and crabs.

Southeast peoples settled where there was good soil for planting. The basic settlement unit was the local village or town. The village was often surrounded by a tall protective fence. It held a council house or temple, homes of the ruling classes or families, and structures for storing communal produce. The whole community gathered for celebrations and ceremonies in the village. People also lived in small hamlets. Hamlets were located in river valleys and contained storage buildings and a few houses. A number of hamlets were usually associated with a larger village.

Housing styles varied within the Southeast culture area. Winter houses were typically circular houses that were sealed tight except for an entryway and smoke hole. Summer dwellings were usually rectangular with a sloping roof made of thatch. The Seminole developed the chickee, a house with a raised floor, palmetto-thatched roof, and open sides. To the west, some groups lived in domed grass houses.

The village was the basic unit of social and political organization among Southeast tribes. Some communities housed more than 1,000 people, but they more often had fewer than 500 residents. Generally, each village was independent and governed its own affairs. In times of need, villages could unite into confederacies, such as those of the Creek and Choctaw.

Most Southeast cultures had social classes with membership based on birth. The ruling class consisted of chiefs and war leaders. A chief inherited his power. A chief’s power differed among the tribes. The Natchez chief was known as the Great Sun, who was treated as a god. Other tribes had chiefs with much more modest power.

Most Southeast peoples traced their ancestry through the mother’s side of the family. Many societies further organized family relations through clans. Clans usually included members from different villages, which created helpful links between villages. Women were responsible for most farming, gathering wild plant foods, cooking, and caring for young children and elders. Men were responsible for war, trade, and hunting.

Like most other Native American culture areas, the Southeast Indian religion was based on animism. Animism is the belief that all living things and natural objects have spirits or souls. Southeast peoples believed that animal spirits were capable of carrying out revenge against humans. Because of this, hunting was a sacred act that involved ritual, sacrifice, and strict regulations. They also believed that plants had spiritual power, but plants were considered friendly to humans.

Shamans, or holy people, had stones and quartz crystals that were considered sacred. Most Southeast peoples had myths and folktales that were full of nature spirits, monsters, giants, and other supernatural figures.

The peoples of the Southeast suffered greatly as the Spanish colonized the region in the 1500s. Thousands of Indians were killed during warfare and thousands died in epidemics of European diseases. Through the 1600s missionaries worked to convert the Southeast peoples to Roman Catholicism. Trade between the Indians and the Europeans increased greatly during this time.

By 1790 there were more than 1 million white settlers and African slaves in the Southeast region. The settlers demanded more land. They wanted the government to deal with the Indians harshly. In 1830 the United States Congress passed the Indian Removal Act. This law gave the Southeast tribes land in the unsettled West in exchange for their desirable land in the East. The Cherokee fought this using legal action. The resulting court cases, Cherokee Nation v. Georgia and Worcester v. Georgia, helped to define the legal status of Native Americans within the United States. The Seminoles fought fiercely for their homes. The Seminole Wars were the most expensive military actions undertaken by the U.S. government up to that point.

Eventually, all the Southeast tribes were forced to move westward. Those who experienced this migration named it the Trail of Tears. Some individuals were able to avoid the migration by hiding out in swamps or mountains. Their descendants still live in the Southeast.

During the 1970s Southeast tribes were allowed to once again appoint their own governments. From that point into the 2000s, the Southeast peoples emphasized economic development. They used their income to support programs ranging from education to health care to cultural preservation.

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